Bill Johnson sent on a newsletter that included a valuable article about privacy, security cameras and location information. I finally found a version on the Web. It’s titled: Surveillance of Public Spaces: A Privacy Issue? by Don Peppers & Martha Rogers, Ph.D.
Security cameras and the data they collect are becoming parts of more and more GIS systems. Security cameras made the front page in my city newspaper in the past few weeks.
by Adena Schutzberg on 04/10 at 08:13 AM |
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YellowPin launched not long ago. It’s an inexpensive (99 cents/month) mobile social networking tool. Here one way it advertised itself via SMS, its core technology:
“who needs GPS when you can just say where you are”
Part of the pitch is that you control your location sharing because you are not tracked and must manually share (or not) your location. Some months ago in a podcast my colleague Joe Francica made the argument that the whole point of LBS is that location determination is automated. Clearly YellowPin is turned that idea on its head and selling the safety and security of both non-automated location determination and non-automated sharing of that location information.
via mobile messaging 2.0
by Adena Schutzberg on 04/10 at 07:39 AM |
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I know that’s not news but there were two posts on the matter that help me confirm that users and organizations are stepping solidly into the world of new and social media. They also highlight different approaches.
First off, this post from Justin C. Houk highlights how he didn’t attend the ESRI Dev Summit, but it didn’t matter because he could follow it in real time and slightly delayed fashion. Now, he’s on a mission to hook others up with great things the new tools can do for geospatial technology users.
Second, a press release from GITA highlighted how a social networking site has been set up for the event. The “Solutions Conference Social Event Networking Site, powered by Zerista, ... [allows]... attendees to network before, during, and after the conference. The site is an exclusive benefit for attendees of the 2009 Geospatial Infrastructure Solutions Conference, set for April 19-22, 2009, in Tampa, FL.”
Now, from what I saw, ESRI didn’t set up any special tools for the event, but rather attendees and non-attendees used existing tools (Twitter, Slideshare, etc.) to share and communicate. Frankly, I loved that as someone who didn’t attend, I could read posts from those who did, follow links, make contacts, just as Justin did.
GITA has a hosted solution accessible only to attendees. I fully understand that participation in the network is a benefit of registering. I’ll be curious to see how the site is used by attendees. I also wonder how much of what goes on at GITA will appear via existing, open social media channels.
by Adena Schutzberg on 04/10 at 07:14 AM |
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